The difference between a country’s value of imports and its value of exports
Net export is the difference between a country’s value of imports and its value of exports. It can be either positive or negative.
A positive net export figure shows a country’s trade surplus. It means that the value of the nation’s imports is lower than the value of its exports. A country with a trade surplus receives more money from a foreign market than it spends.
A negative net export figure is a trade deficit for a given country. It means that the overall value of the country’s imports is greater than the overall value of its exports. A country with a trade deficit spends more money in a foreign market than it makes.
The net export of a country can be computed as follows:
Where:
For example, let us assume Malaysia exports $1.89 billion of rubber and imports $250 million of rubber and $390 million of gasoline from Indonesia.
Using the formula above, Malaysia’s net export is calculated as:
Net export = $1.89 billion – ($250 million + $390 million) = $1.89 billion – $640 million
Net export = $1.25 billion
Malaysia’s net exports are $1.25 billion.
Gross domestic product (GDP) is a calculation of the market value of all final goods and services generated by a country over a given period of time. There are three ways to determine or compute the GDP of a country. They include:
The expenditure method is a gross domestic product (GDP) measurement system that incorporates consumption, investment, government spending, and net exports. The approach yields nominal GDP, which then needs to be modified to cater for inflation, thereby producing the actual GDP.
There are four main cumulative expenditures for computing GDP: household consumption, government spending on goods and services, business investment, and net exports (which are equivalent to exports minus imports of goods and services).
Where:
Example
Given the following information about Country X:
Calculate the country’s net export and its GDP:
Net export = $540,000 – $290,000
Net export = $250,000
GDP = $950,000 + $359,000 + $600,000 + $250,000
GDP = $2.159 million
Country X posts a trade surplus (net export) of $250,000, and its GDP is $2.159 million.
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